OFFICIAL PAPER 1 MY SUCCESS I m ? Is owing to my liberality in ad-: FREQUENT AND CONSTANT Advertising brought me all I own, A. Ti Stewart. vertising. Robert Bonner. ; 1 iiiMiMa!iii.HiiiiiiiiiimjiiMM!iJiiiiiuiiitiiiiiiiniiiiiii asuiiii THIRTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1895. t WEEKLY WO. 65 I I SEMI-WEEKLY N , 61 f I Mil M IllMtMll 11 1 Nil WII MtMMil!M. JHilil4'Ur OF SEMI WEEKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY m PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY OTIS PATTERSON, . - '. Editor A. W. PATTERSON, Business Manager At fl.50 per year, $1.25 for eiz months, 75 eta. ;or three moiicns. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. THIS PAPKR is kept on tile at E. CI. Date's AdvertisinK Agency, M and 65 Merchants Exchange., San Francisco. California, where oou racts for advertising can be made for it. Union Paofic Railway-Local card. No. 9, mixed, leaves Heppner 3:30 p. m. dally except Sunday. Arrives at Willows Junction 6:20 p m. No. 10, mixed, leaves Willows Junction 7:15 !P. m. Arrives at Heppner 10 p. m. daily except iSn nday . East bound, main line arrives at Willows ."Junction 1:46 a. m. West bound, main line, leaves illows Junc tion 12:15 a. m. West bound Portland fast frelRht with pas senger coach leaves Willows Junction 6:38 p. m. and arrives at The Dalles at 12:01a m. Here passengers from the branch lay over till 3:15 a. m. and take the fast mall west bound which ar rives at Portland 7:25 a. m. The Dulles and Portland passenger leaves The Dalles daily at 2:15 p. m. and arrives it Portland 6:510 p.m. Leaves Portland 8.00 , m. dally snd arrives at The Dalles 12:15 p. m. This connects with the east bound way freight with passenger coach which leaves The DalleB at 1:30 p. m., arriving at WUIowb Junction 6:58 p. in. OrriCIAL DIBBOTOET. United States Officials. President'. G rover Cleveland Vice-President Ad ai Stevenson Hanferarv nf Htata Richard 8. Olney Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle Secretary of Interior Hoke Smith Meoretary of War Daniel S. Lamnnt ideoretary of Navy Hilary A. Herbert Postmaster-General William U. Wi son Attorney-General Judson Harmon ijsoret&ryof Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. 'Governor W. P. Lord Secretary of Btate H. K. Kincnld Treasurer Phil. Metsnhan Hunt. Public Instruction fl. M Irwin Attorney General C. M. Id'eman " ( G. W. MnBriUe Senators )j H Mitchell ( Binger Hermann Congressmen j w. R. Ellis Printer W. K. Leeds H. B. Hnan & I MMOM4.3 Reader, did you ever take Simmons Liver Regulator, the "King of Liver Medicines?" Everybody needs take a liver remedy. It is a slugg: sh or diseased liver that impairs digestion and causes constipation, when the waste that should be carried off remains in the body and poisons the whole system. That dull, heavy feeling is due to a torpid liver. Biliousness, Headache, Malaria and Indigestion are all liver diseases. Keep the liver active by an occasional dose of Simmons Liver Reg ulator and you'll get rid of these trou bles, and give tone to the whole sys tem. For a laxative Simmons Liver Regulator is better than Pills. It does not gripo, nor weaken, but greatly refreshes and strengthens. F-very package has the Ked Z stamp oil the wrapper. J. II. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia. Branch Asylum Casb Ended The Eastern Oregon branoh asylum oase is at last ended and Union baa bi-en robbed of what was justly hers. Judge Hewitt in the oiromt court last Tuesday handed down the decision in this cues. He duds that tbe said branch insane asylum ia one ot tbe institutions of tbe state and by the constitution of Oregon is required to be looated at the seal of government. Tbe act providing for said asylum is de clared to be in violation of Section 3 of Article 14 of the constitution of Oregon. The injunction agHinat building tbe asy lum i made perpetual. While this is a shame and disgrace to the state of Ore eon, yet, it ia some oonsnlation to know ill at tbe oase ia at last ended and ia out if the courts. THE OWEN If you use the PetalumS Incubators a Brooder-. Make money while others are wasting time by old processes. Cataloetells all about It and ripftrrihru evprv article needed for the. poultry business. moss i QSL Catalogue W The "ERIE mechanically the best .wneci. ireiuc5imuuci. We are Pacific Coast Asrents. Bicvcle cata- logue,mailed free.givee full description, prices, etc., aobnts wanted. PETALUMA INCUBATOR CO.,Petaluma,CaL Branch House, 131 s Main ht., Los Angeles. ELECTRIC BELT Trade Mark Dr. A. Owen Supreme Judges F. A. Moore, ( C. E. Wolverton Seventh Judicial District. CIrcnit Judge ".. W. L, Bradshaw Prosecuting Attorney A. A. Jayne Morrow County Official. Joint Senator A. W. Oowan Uepresentative J- 8- Bnothny tantyjndge Julius Keithl; " Commissioners J. K. Howard J. M. Baser. m " Clerk J.W. Morrow " Bheriff Q. W. Harrington " Trnasnrer Frank Uilliam Atweenor.. J. i.'. Willi. " 8nrveyor. G. I-ord " Hohool Bup't Anna Kalsuer ' Coroner T.W.Ayers.Jr BEPPMIB TOWH OFFICERS. Mayor Thoe. Morgan Cwncilinaa O. K. Fanisworth. M. Lichtenthal. Otis Patterson, T. W. Aysrs.Jr., 8. B. Horner, E. J. Blocura. ..... rteeonlar.... F. J- Hallnck Treiwnrer E. L Felml Marshal A. A. Robert Precinct Officer. Jnsticenf the Peace E. L. Finland ConsUble N. 8. WheUtous United States hand Olttceri. TBI DALLES, OB. J. F. Moore A. 8. Biggs , LA OB.AKDI, OB. B. F, Wilson J. H. Itobbins Subecribera to the Weekly Sun, tbe O'imiug paper of Oregon, $1 per year. With the Gz 'He, both in advance, ?2 75 per year. A good combination Two nf the penple'a paper at one prio Hubecribe a' th (iztte nfflne. . Keisr . IleceiTr ,.Rgl"er . Itweiver se:kxt societies. KAWLI.N8 POST, NO. IL O. A. B. S'oete it Lexinton, Or., the last Hat'irdar of itch month. All veteran are Invited to Join. ::. 8Kn, Ueo. W. Hmits. Ailloiant, tf Commander. L U M B E It ! Iff RAVE roR HAl'lt AIX KIM OP DN If dreased Lumber. Mmileeol Heppner, at what Is known ae the BOOTT S A.VCT3VIIIj1j. PI 1,000 FEET. KUL'UH, " - " CLEAR, - - - 1900 - 17 M I F nruvERitn is hrppser, will add S.VIW per l."i Imxt additional. The above quolatlons are strictly for Cash. L HAMILTON, Prop. Rational BanK of Heppner. WM. PENLAND. ti). R. BIHHUP, PrMldeet. Cwkler. TRANSACTS A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS COLLKOTIONH UrnU on Favorable Term. EXCHANGE BOUGHT & SOLD UEITNF.ll. tf ORF.OON FOR MEN AND WOMEN The latest and only scientific and practical Eleutrio Bolt made, for general use. nrodnnlns a genuine current of Electricity, for the cure of disease, that can be readily felt and regu lated both In quantity and power, and applied to any part of the body. It can be worn at any uuiouuiuig nviAiug jiuuiBur Biuup, auu WILL POSITIVELY CURE KHFlTItlATISOT LUMBAGO GEN EH A L DEBILITY I.AJ1 li BACK NERVOUS DISEASES VAIIICOCELK SBCXI'AL WEAKNESS KIDNEY DISEASES WITHOUT MEDICINE Electricity, properly applied, Is fast taking tnenlnAnr rlrlicra fnr nil Jorirrt,ia Wl,a...v.o 1a Kidney and Urinal Troubles, and will effeci cures in seemingly nopeicss cases where every other known means has failed. Any sluggish, weak or diseased organ may dj uin niuuiis do rouseu 10 ceaimy activity before It is too late. Leading medical men use and recommend the uwen ueii in tneir practice. OUR LARGE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE j Contains fullest Information regarding the cure w. omio,iuuuiiupim ncivuiia uiBcantjfj, priueB, ana how to order, In English, German. Swedish and Norwegian languages, will be mailed, upon ft.nniinntlnn trt inv aHHrAia A vanA The Owen Electric Belt and Appliance Co. MAIN OrriCI AND ONLY TACTORT, The Owen Electric Delt Cldg., 201 to 211 Slate Street, CHICAGO. ILL. The Largest Electric Bell Establishment in the World mbntion this PAmn. ; A FACTS ' Ij I WSMtt FACTS !!. I YOU CAN BL'Y IJ5 00 worth of dry Roods and groceries end then have enoiiKh left out ol lino.no to purchase a So. 1 Crewent Illrycle. This Is a nrnt-rln.n machliiu. Why then Dv 1100.00 tor a bicvcle that will live no bettor service 1 CRKCEST "Scorcher," weight 20 pounds, onlv 'i0. Ladles' and Units' roadsters all the way from ') to (TV "Boys' Junior," only with pnutimatlc tiro a good machine. "Our Special," Men's V; Ladles', i'jO. AVDRKS- WESTERN WHEEL WORKS, CHICAGO AND NEW YORK, THE PITTERSOX I'L'B. W- llntitifiltr. Ortfrtll. MORROW AND GRANT v ' 1 y Counties. THE INTER OCEAN -19 THE- Most Popular Peputllcan Newspaper of the West And Has the Largest Circulation. TERMS Bl' MAIL DAILY (without Sunday). DAILY (with Sunday).... $6.00 per year $8. 00 per year The Weekly Inter Ocean m .00 V PER YEAR 1H' A NrWSPAPI R TMI! ISItM OCEAN sktwl ItM IIsms n .11 rpu It iiwi nHHf cin nor nprrw ia M(rtai ALL 1I1H M. AM Ttlll HLM Or- ClkUI.M UTLUAlLMb. B FREE . 1 1 1 . . C. iniii 'A t-m rr -T SSr V ,1, ,M Matr .4 t, ? tnm.tumt. Kh vM ( ans lmiry.nl. (.KIK ur Ml lh SnoM l.fll KUM, pz nun cvrnno. THltWT0r HUIICallCHOCO. iHmtmw tMg.. Hm Vo (Jty. I cnvieet weejTift. The Weekly Inter Ocean AS A FAMILY PAPER IS NOT EXCELLED BY ANY. m i 1 1 ll he enmMhlnf o lnirr.t ik.kI) m.inkrr M h. I.anitv I' M M IH I't HAI I Ml St M itw ka 4 tL!l4. ," LJSJ II llaUll.hAKV M.AIlhl.r(w4M.l.4. II POLITIC AI I V IT I H H W ICA. and f lie r4r. H K.mit f IS. eM'.l d.. ".. (l iv( ulnks4 Ibshs. II alM lt IImm lHL rLwaOr1 lnboku, IT IS A TWELVE-PAGE PAPER. Tur ihtm ocpi w pti ihi ti ts cniCAo. tmp srwa if emit pcui tlMIHUf AI.I Wt ) Mil AMIOMANV MMMS, ! IIIIIU AltAPIIIt TO I Ml! M I bl Ol illu H.UPLE Ol II1AI M.CTI01 THAN AS PAP1.M Alt I Ml K LAST. It le la M mn the pMpte rf the bmtU Hi PUMke a4 l.lr .tare. P1' fmumhf th.i tkepr u IS. Wckly mOus Is ONLY OM; UoL. "M",u"' A4J'- THK INTER OCEAN. Chicego Hi 1 feat 'Cnla'a llf arpul fVtr e I He nW lwv.ie If jn tn4 art t0 CmIoI ll-.jJ anj . 1 in. L.wcAniKi; Insura ck Co. WERE I THE SUN. I'd always shine on holidays, Were I the sun; On sleepy heads I'd never Raze, But focus all my morning rays On busy folks of bustling ways, Were I the sun. I would not melt a sledding snow, Were I the sum Nor spoil the ice where skaters go, Nor help those useless weeds to grow, But hurry melons on, you know, Were 1 the sun. I'd warm the swimming pool Just right, Were I the sun; On school days I would hide my light The Fourth I'd always give you bright, Nor set so soon on Christmas night, Were I the sua I would not heed such paltry toys, Were I the sun Such work as grown-up men employes But I would favor solid Joys In short, I'd run the world for boys. Were 1 the sun. Amos R Wells, In St. Nichelea. MY COUSIN MARY. Ol MAMl'IIICMTKMi ICAM 1 1, A IV I W. TflL:'j)i, A'lLVI. "o ;''lti" Hnwl tee Mia. V..rl.1 It was my sad fortune, from earliest boyhood up, to be a failure in all ways. I was not so handsome as could have been expected in the son of my beauti ful mother and the young father who died before I was born, and who was also beautiful, I was told. I was not brilliant, thouirh both sides of the iiouse showed men and women of ex- :ellent ability, and, worst of all, I was not Rood, though this puzzled me Dot a little as a child, for my intentions were of a magnificent order, and the result ant behavior not nearly so reprehensl ble as that of many boya I knew, less punished. But, in some way, the things I meant to do failed of accomplishment, or were found, when accomplished, to have most unhappy consequences; and the things I did under pressure of disci pline were seldom satisfactory. Years of reproof and often overheard complaint as to my trying disposition finally convinced me of my unworthi ness, and in time I grew to look at my life as a failure, merely an opportunity for as much self-indulgence as could be procured without too great expense. Being of a lazy and luxurious dispo sition, I early fell into the habit of de riving an inexhaustible fund of pleas ure from mere imagination of what things might be: to console myself for ineffectual struggle to make them such. As a little boy I was sent to bed with military precision by my inflexible mother, usually with a sense of failure and ill-doing in the day behind me, and I used to lie mute and still in my little chamber and make up to myself in royal bursts of imagination for the disappointments of the real life. How often, so lain, and thought to be sound asleep. I have, in spirit, not only es tablished my preeminent virtues by a series of noble acts so easy to Imagine, so difficult to perform in the gray irk- someness of everyday life but besides this have I glutted my infant soul with the sweet vengeance of magnanimity; arranging unparalleled donations anil privileges to be conferred by me, mo the lamentable anu unwortny son, upon my grateful family and friends. One sweetest Joy of these fair dreams wa that, when I should be a man, my Cousin Mary, who disliked me for the disagree able boy I was, should love and marry me. It was a sore ptobiem with me in those days to decide whether I should indeed receive the open gratitude of my beneficiaries, revelling gloriously therein; or whether, proudest height of power concealed, I should bestow all benefits in secret, and yet remain con demned and criticised by the unwit ting reclpU-nts of my bounty. Hut my Cousin Mary in these dreams always loved me for tnyw-lf alone, and then afterward ah! the jewela I showered upon her. This habit of internally satihfylDg myself, of paying back In trlumphaut magnanimity for all "tbe stingaand arrows of outrageous fortune" con tin ued with me as I grew, and remained my best consolation after I had become an unaspiring reporter on a great news paper. And still in my solitary cham ber downtown, when I was not so tired as to sleep perforce In what hours re-! maliifd to me, I would commie myself fur all the mortification of the day and of all the other days In my unhappy 1 memory, by proud, uuhaoipered visions of what 1 would do under given condi tions of wealth and power. I Splendid condition these, so easily Imagined, Biting so smoothly to my shoulders a 1 planned and adapted them, but ah! so laughably Impossible of attalnaient 1 And then, all at once, by a chance do stranger, to be sure, than many a one I waa In the dally habit of recording, j there fell Into my handa, not talent and Ix'suty and power, Indeed, as I had demanded in my bnyitdi dreams, but1 wraith practically unbounded, such ! wealth a I could never of myself have 1 earned, or won, or found, or In any least or faintest way daMTved. To be sure, 1 had been laying myself out on the old fellow, a I should never have dared to do had 1 known hlra for ' a millionaire, but that was hot for I- nevolrnne, but a purely ai llish appre ciation of bia boundlesa fund of travel andeiprrience. IlisMiclety waa worth money to me beside the pleasure of It, and therefore did I rourt him aaaldu oualy, with many an entertainment and ei'.'uralon, whlrh again were no credit to my generosity, for had I not the Interminable ticket and pa and the duty of going to all thene weary thing? a duty much lightened by the society of the lounging. Invalid old gentleman, whom I supposed do richer than myself. I told lilts my story, such as It waa; and I am fain to think that some aub t.e sympathy, some eonsclounea of a milar e per-one la hiaowa boyhood, made him take more of so Interest than I thB auspeeted to th'S poor series Of failures I called my life. Then he died very soddenly and w-e. ti. v ftievm unbelievable itiiliiot,. arid a no oe t.ut in wiii iior knew that he had any money, so DO one knew that I had any; ami behold ir.e forthwith ia exactly the poatUoa tit oj fchwdtah heart detlre! What joy! What wild, free rap ture of plans, with occasional bursts of fancy which even I dismissed aa quite untenable. For instance, I had no longer any faintest hope of marrying my Cousin Mary. She was' quite taken up with another cousin, Fred by name, and would have married him long since, no doubt, had he been able to support a family. But he was proud, and would not marry until he could offer something to his wife. I knew that, for he had told me so. However, It was now my delicious fate to be able to arrange matters for these two so that they should be able to marry; neither knowing how it had come about, nor in the least corner of their hearts suspecting me. Then with what swelling pride should 1 look upon their happiness and know that I had given it 1, who so far had given only trouble and mortification to my family! It was an easy matter' to make my mother's last years comfortable; and ah! the pleasure, the selfish pride I took in remembering small personal wishes and gratifying them bit by bit, while never suspected! It was an easy matter, too, through my agent, to buy the very paper on which I wrote; to slowly dismiss the men who were a disgrace to it, to pro mote and engage men whose work made it a great voice soon, and through it, slowly to win the public confidence and work my will, little by little, among the affairs of the city. Such a splendid game it was to arouse public enthusiasm over some free baths, or children's play-ground scheme or other, to start subscription lists, and covertly head them myself; to machin ate safely and quietly through my great pages, and all the while having my copy refused half the time, and the other fellows wondering how I kept my place. All this, and much more, was easy and exciting; more of a triumph and a joy even than I had ever imagined it would be; but my pet scheme of schemes hung fire a little. Fred got his new position, in a perfectly natural manner; he was a good fellow and de served it. Still there was no sign of an engagement between him and my Cousin Mary. Then I thought, being an independent girl, she might be waiting to have something of her own; and after as pretty a bit of finesse as 1 ever saw in my life, if it was my own Invention and small wonder, for had I not schemed at such pleasant mir acles since I was eight years old? I managed to provide her with a neat little fortune of her own. Still no re sult So one day when I was at home I did not go often, for mother would always lecture me on my habits, and somehow I never could entirely get over the hurt of it, big as 1 was I chanced to be alone with my Cousin Mary for as much of an evening as she would be willing to bear my company. I felt very happy to see how beauti fully she was dressed in these diiys, how her hands were white already, and grown smooth again where the delicate hngers used to be rough with countless needle pricks. The house was a comfortable one now, my mother was far easier In her mind and there fore a sweeter companion. Everything looked pleasant around Mary, and I told her how glad I was to aee it I did not tell her how glad 1 was to see her, how in all the rich and varied joy of my present position, as in all the unutterable weariness and dullness of my former state, to see her was the keenest delight I ever felt, or ever hoped to feel. Calm, strong, beautiful woman that she was; perfect in loveli ness of face and form and character mine would be a poor triumph, after all, if 1 could oot contrive to make her happy. 1 sat watching her, and she watched the leaping flames of the fire; and I wondered clumsily ii what possible way I could force her into the happi ness which ahould be hers, when all at once she rose and come to my aide. "Cousin Tom," she aaid, In that de licious voice of hers, "why don't you amount to more why don't you do yourself justice In tome way? Is It" and here ahe bluahed beautifully but the cousinshlp gave ber courage, and she went on. "Is it for lack of money to make a start with? Because, you know, I am quite rich now because 1 want you to let me you'll forgive my awkwardness, won't you? to let me give you aotue of it, Tom, a whole pile of It" That blessed, generous, eelf-forget-ting creature! Hhe looked so lovely aa ahe said It that my poor brain awain dizzily. "No," aaid I, at length, "it Is not lack of money, my dear Cousin Mary, but sheer personal incapacity that prevent my amounting to anything. I am an ordinary, stupid fellow at bent, and my family are too clear-headed to give me that blind, loving faith which makea even stupid fellow do very well some time," "You are not stupid," ahe cried, "nor ordinary. I know you lietter than you think. You could be something splen did If you choa. Why don't you choose?" And then ha looked at me with such an earnest, tender, believing glance a fairly drove to to her fret. "Oh, Mary, you bleel angel!" I erlrd to her; "could you would you I it fHieoibla that you, after all. can find It In your tweet heart to make a plane for such a uwile g'jl for noth ing aa I?" And then my Cousin Mary just came Into my arma and comforted my sore heart with a thousand tender word of hope and faith. And ahe aaid the aweeteat joy of joy to her waa that Dow she wa really able to help me with her priK-lou little fortune. And since aha values it so much I have let hr help Die with It alwaya A If any fortune, great or small, were to las mentioned in the name breath with her ov!-'lhe Imprvfc, Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report (011 'Baking Absolutely pure ENGLISH DIFFICULT TO LEARN. Few Frenchman Can Pronounce the Lan guage Without an Aooent. The Frenchman, past or present, who speaks English especially well and does not pronounce English names with an accent that is peculiarly French is very rare indeed. President Felix Faure now holds the honors throughout all France for his excellent English, and Englishmen resident in Paris, as well as the public men of London, who have epportunities of knowing, say that he quite equals Na poleon III. in his fluency a l'Anglaise. M. Faure, in fact, is the first of tin presidents who has been able to pro nounce English well. Thiers, MacMa hon, Orevy and Carnot had a very im perfect knowledge of that language and Orevy was especially weak, not only in his pronunciation but in his handling of English verbs. This is a curious fact, and a rather instructive one, when it comes to be recalled that nearly all the last kings of France were good English scholars. Among French statesmen Baron de Cour".el, the present ambassador of the French republic at the court of St. James, has a fine grasp of the language of the country to which he is accred ited. This diplomat showed this in a most marked manner during the meet ings of the Behring sea fishery arbitra tion, in which he took a prominent part. Clemenceau, the editor and dep uty, has the reputation of speaking the best English in France, and several times during his visits to London he has addressed deputations of British workmen in their own tongue, being able to make himself amply under stood by the most ignorant man pres ent. Tha "Morn-Tlr.d" Man. The fellow who was born very tired grew more and more weary as he went through the haps and mishaps of child hood, the adolescence of youth and the early period of manhood. At middle age he was the tiredest man then liv ing. At fifty he was so utterly worn out with the simple process of existing that it occurred to him to calculate how many breaths he must draw if he went on living for twenty years more, ind, being a man in fair preservation, there was a good prospect of his reach' ing the) allotted threescore and ten years of average mankind. Well, the tired citizen flmirort It out on the bnMr of eighteen breaths a minute, 1,0H0 to the hour, 25,920 to the day, D,43,2HU for a year and 189,343,800 for twenty years. The figures appalled him, and le dud in disgust find diseourngemein WbiHipInt Coauh. There ia no danger from this diener when Chamberlain's Cough It mady if freely given It liqiiefle the tough ma one and Bids ite eipectnration. It al leen tbe e verity and frequency of paroxysm of congbing, and insure speedy recovery. There i not the least danger in giving tbe remedy to children or babies, aa it onntaio no injurious Mtitit,ice. For sale by rJlooum-Jobn oo Drug Co. CONCEIT OF NOTtD PEOPLt ing are the several types of lamp clocks. One of these, says Cassier's Magazine, was of a kind quite common in the seventeenth century, and con sisted of a lamp burner placed at the base of a glass oil receptacle mounted vertically on a suitable standard. The oil reservoir had attached to it a scale, facing the burner and showing the hours, beginning at four o'clock in the afternoon at which time the lamp was to be lighted in winter, and ending at seven o'clock in the morning. The lamp being lighted, the ernd'Tlv de scending level ot the oil, as combus tion proceeded, marked the hours. The other device, of later origin, dating back to the beginning of the present century, utilized the same principle. It consisted of two communicating oil chambers, superposed by a clock dial. In one of the chambers was placed a night lamp to illuminate this dial, and in the other was suspended a float from a cord which passed around a small puiiey. i ne latter was mounted on a horizontal axis ending in the center of the dial. The float of course descended as the oil was consumed and carried the index hand along with it, thus making the hours precisely as in the case already cited. At their best, these timepieces could have had only an in different degree of accuracy, yet they probably Berved their purpose well, and certainly are interesting at the present time as illustrating some of the expedi ents adopted by mechanicians of an earlier period. Many of Them War onflclrnl That Thar llait Mails Their Mame Immortal. It I of course pardonable that great man ahould have a high opinion of hlmm-lf, aays a recent writer. One cannot find much fuult with Words worth, even when one reads that he spuko of himself as writing on, though fully assured that his poem would lie unMipular, Ih'cuiihu he knew that they would also Irn Immortal! Many other poet have laid to the! utii ll. i u, ii,,. nil , iiti ll (r iiiifiifin null . ... ... . . - - -.... ' i i iirisiian r.micavor nave nern coiiu-ni to waiv lor poairr NO HUnhY IN Kwi.vVAY. People Take Their lime Thera and Won der at anke Vliitor. These Norwegians are a wonderfully patient people. They never hurry; why should they? There is always time enough. We breakfast at nine. Mon- ilcur goes to business at ten or so, and eturns to his dinner, like all the rest if the Scandinavian world, at half-past two. We reach coffee and cigarettes at ibout four, and then monsieur goes iack to his office, if he likes, for two or lireo hours. We sometimes see him. gain at supper at half-past eight, but mually there 1b a game of whuitora eographical society lecture, or a cou ert, or a friend's birthday fete (an oc asion never overlooked by your true Norwegian), or some one has received a barrel of oysters, and would not, could lot, dream of opening them without hampugne and company masculine 'oinpany only. It seems to me that here are entirely too many purely male iHttivitles here. In fact, the men say io themselves, and that they would really enjoy many of the occasion much more if ladies were present. But "it is not the custom of the country" (a rock on which I am alway foundering) to omit or to change In such matters. Monsieur only does a do all the other men of his age, which I elderly, and condition, which is solid. There ia a curious feeling concerning America over here, in one way and another. Morgenbladet, the chief con servative paper, an organ locally of the first Importance, keeps a sort of horror chamber of Americana. The reason Is, I suppose, that In these very dark and treubloua political times, when not only the union, but the monarchy Itself, I threatened and tottering, the conserva Mve Interest thinks It dangerous to illow any virtue to appear In a re public, and especially In ours, the immt flourishing, and therefore the most pernicious, example of that Inven tion of evil bred. ity, which, however, has not always been content to read them. Horace, speaking of hi odea, aaid: "I have erected a monument mure durable than brass and more regal than the lofty lielghtsof the pyramids," while Shakee peare In ono of his sonnet lined an ei preaalon so aimilar that one auspecta it at once of being borrowed: ' Nut Biarbla, nr the flirted moaunent Of prince hall outlive this lofty rhyme; Hut yiu ti4ll .bin mure brif ht la tbee eon tenia Tho unaeept tonn, beaired with eluUlnh time." Lord Ten ny win, too, la reported to have said the "Hugle .Hong" In "The Prince" U the flneht lyric In the Eng lish language. Waller havage Landor wa nf the opinion that Ida "Imaginary Conversation" were of such literary value that there had not been five vol ume of prte to equal them In two thousand year. Coming to another sphere of life" from that of the poet the cricket field, to-wlt we may men tion old Lilly white, who uf d to say: "I bowl the beat ball In Kngland and Mr. Ilorene bowl the nest." It la quite true, doubtle; but even ll truth wa overshadowed by ll beautiful modrnty. It la related of Victor Hugo that, when quite unknown, he walked Into the olll.-e of a certain publlaher and t'l'il to a-ll him some poem. The pnlilixhi r wa not In a buying frame of mind, and Victor, a he wont out, aaid: "You have to-day thrown away a for tune, lr. 1 wa about Ui make an ar rangement with m whereby ou would be able U publUh everything I ahall write in the future. You have ot the opportunity. It la one that will never occur again." It Is thought Unit no lea than $100, 000 has rem hed the treasuries of tha mlKHlonary aoclctic this year from the aocletiea in tha churchea. An English paper report a Christian Endeavor cycling club, whose object la to promote om-ii air mlaalon work In village. Thla la a "wheel within a wheel" to good purpoae. MllUI'. lo I.-, tli Old Swel.V rhuri h. founded In IO. It ha a '.hm given by (Jneen Anne and a rotiiiutml'-n atrvkw ooutnUiU-d by wuUiu iui.u . LAMP It v) AND CLOCK COMQINED. la l he 1 nM 'in I mtirtvaea .Mtr tl H i HlHVf, of the Varlou rianipli that l av tm-u i i vi ii of rarlv ! hui ua of the tUku.aku' ait toot the Uat lubfiit-, t-Uru w:y Dr. J. II. McLean's Liver ami Kidney Balm I an nnfaiUfg remedy for all ille eea of the Liver, Kidney or U'lnry O'gdi. It ia a eerialo onra for Do.p.y, DlabelM, llriyhl'a I)im, OrV"l. Kid ney W'raknme, Incontinence nf Untie, Ited Wettiri In OhiMren, Itilinnne( Liver Compliint and Female Tf-nblea. 4 trial "f thm great remedy III con vine vnq of a potency. Price ft 00 per bottle, DUAL UK An AU1ION. Aa Ineana 1'allent WkaWaa iatlme A ciirloii eav of dual brain action I dcncrilM'd In drain. An Inaane patient varied considerably In hi mental con dition. In one slate he wa aubjeut to chronic mania. poke KnglUli, wa fair ly Intelligent, and wa rlght handedi In another atate he wa kuhtm-t to de mentia, wa almost unintelligible, but what could lx uinlcrslood waa Welsh, and he waa then left handed. In hi English Interval he remembered clear ly what had happened In previous Eng lish prrtod. but hi memory w a blink to what occurred during tha Wrlatl at age. II preferred to wrlla I with hi right bend, but If asked to do I eo, would writ with hie left hand, and then the writing wa from right to left. Mr. Ilruce, wtio observed the ease, In fer from It that the cerebral hernia pliere are capable of Individual meaial action, that tha one nienia'dy active at anytime ran cmirnl the niot.tr fu no tions, and that the patient live two M.inii'e rtisUnie during the two tt?c tliroui'li v hi" li h pasw. the nii'iiUl luiri mioii lu f'i. It niftii U in rr-it JuU lu ou baitbit ttvu.it